Core Viewpoint - Walmart plans to increase prices due to the impact of tariffs on goods, indicating that the magnitude and speed of these price hikes could be unprecedented in history [1][2]. Price Increases - The company has already begun raising prices on certain items, such as bananas, which increased from 50 cents to 54 cents per pound [1]. - Walmart's Chief Financial Officer, John David Rainey, warned that consumers will see higher prices "towards the tail end of this month, and then certainly much more in June" due to the tariffs [3]. Financial Performance - Despite the challenging environment, Walmart reported strong sales, with US same-store sales increasing by 4.5% and Sam's Club by 6.7% for the three months ending May 2 [7]. - E-commerce sales in the US rose by 21%, marking the 12th consecutive double-digit gain, while global online sales increased by 22% year-over-year [7]. - However, net income fell to $4.49 billion, or 56 cents per share, down from $5.10 billion, or 63 cents per share, in the same period last year, and revenue rose about 2.5% to $161.5 billion, missing expectations of $165.84 billion [9]. Market Positioning - The company plans to absorb some tariff costs to maintain competitive pricing against rivals [4][8]. - Walmart has not canceled any orders but has reduced the size of some purchases in anticipation of customer pullback due to tariffs [11]. - The retailer expects to gain market share during the trade war, as more high-income households chose Walmart for groceries in the previous quarter [10].
Walmart warns ‘unprecedented' price hikes are coming as tariffed goods start to hit shelves